Publication | Open Access
An interlaboratory study of complex variant detection
11
Citations
15
References
2017
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringGeneticsGenomicsGene RecognitionHigh Throughput SequencingGenetic AnalysisData MiningPattern RecognitionBiostatisticsMolecular DiagnosticsVariant InterpretationComplex Variant DetectionKnowledge DiscoverySynthetic ControlsSequencingBioinformaticsNext-generation SequencingDifferent Ngs WorkflowsComputational BiologyAbstract Next-generation SequencingSystems BiologyMedicine
ABSTRACT Next-generation sequencing (NGS) is widely used and cost-effective. Depending on the specific methods, NGS can have limitations detecting certain technically challenging variant types even though they are both prevalent in patients and medically important. These types are underrepresented in validation studies, hindering the uniform assessment of test methodologies by laboratory directors and clinicians. Specimens containing such variants can be difficult to obtain; thus, we evaluated a novel solution to this problem in which a diverse set of technically challenging variants was synthesized and introduced into a known genomic background. This specimen was sequenced by 7 laboratories using 10 different NGS workflows. The specimen was compatible with all 10 workflows and presented biochemical and bioinformatic challenges similar to those of patient specimens. Only 10 of 22 challenging variants were correctly identified by all 10 workflows, and only 3 workflows detected all 22. Many, but not all, of the sensitivity limitations were bioinformatic in nature. We conclude that Synthetic controls can provide an efficient and informative mechanism to augment studies with technically challenging variants that are difficult to obtain otherwise. Data from such specimens can facilitate inter-laboratory methodologic comparisons and can help establish standards that improve communication between clinicians and laboratories.
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